⬅️Guide

app to track expenses with friends

👤
Trider TeamApr 18, 2026

AI Summary

Figuring out shared expenses after a trip creates an awkward financial hangover that can strain friendships. Apps like Splitwise and Tricount do the math for you, making it easy to see who owes what without the drama.

That weekend trip was amazing. The late-night talks, the bad food choices, getting hopelessly lost. Then you get home and the financial hangover hits. Who paid for the gas? Did Sarah cover Friday's pizza or was that you?

Trying to figure out shared expenses after a trip is how friendships get weird. It's a mess of texts, screenshots, and fuzzy memories. Someone always ends up paying more and someone else feels awkward about it.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

A good app turns that mess of IOUs into a simple, clear list. No more mental math. No more awkward "Hey, you owe me $17.50 for that burrito" texts. Just a clean ledger of who paid for what and who needs to pay up.

The Two Big Ones: Splitwise and Tricount

For years, the conversation has really been about two apps: Splitwise and Tricount.

Splitwise is the old standby with all the features. It’s built for tracking everything, from a one-off dinner to the monthly rent you share with roommates. You can make a group, log expenses, and see a running tally of who owes whom. It connects to Venmo and PayPal, which makes settling up easier. The catch? The free version has gotten more restrictive, limiting how many expenses you can add and showing ads.

Tricount is the simpler option. It’s popular for trips because it's fast and works offline. You can get a group started and logging expenses without forcing everyone to create an account, which is a huge advantage for a quick weekend away. It does the main job of tracking and balancing money without a lot of clutter.

The choice usually comes down to what you need. Splitwise is a detailed, long-term ledger. Tricount is more of a quick calculator for a specific event.

Newer Apps for Specific Problems

The main two are solid, but newer apps are showing up to solve more specific problems. Some are built just for restaurant bills, with receipt-scanning tech that lets you assign each item to the person who ordered it. So you don't have to split the bill equally when one person had a salad and another had three cocktails.

Others are built for travel and handle different currencies automatically.

The core idea is always the same: log who paid, and the app does the math.

You Friend A Friend B Friend C $50 Gas $80 Groceries Simplified Payments

It’s Less About Money, More About Fairness

I remember one trip, a four-day disaster in a borrowed Honda Civic. We ran out of gas, got a flat tire, and survived on gas station coffee. The expenses were a chaotic mix of cash, card, and Venmo.

At the end, we tallied it up in an app. It wasn't about the money—it was about fairness. It removed the resentment that builds when one person feels like they're footing the whole bill. Using an app turned the messy reality into a simple list.

It shows why having a good system matters. The point isn't to be rigid; it's to create something that reduces the friction. You get the annoying stuff out of the way so you can focus on the experience itself, not the accounting afterward.

Just Pick One and Start

You don't need the perfect app. You just need one that your friends will actually use. For most people, that means something free and simple.

Download Splitwise or Tricount. Create a group for your next outing. The moment the first person pays for something, log it.

It takes ten seconds.

And it saves you from that post-trip headache and the awkwardness that kills friendships faster than arguing over the aux cord.

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